BECAS
SCHEFFER Maila
artículos
Título:
Effects of forest structure and human influence on the call rate of owls in the Piedmont Forest of Northwestern Argentina
Autor/es:
SCHEFFER, MAILA; POLITI, N.; MARTINUZZI, S.; RIVERA, L.
Revista:
Neotropical Biodiversity
Editorial:
Taylor & Francis
Referencias:
Lugar: London; Año: 2022 vol. 9 p. 1 - 9
Resumen:
Owls (Strigiformes) play an important ecological role as predators that structure and organizebiological communities. Specialized owl species dependent on old-growth forests have suffereddeclines because of forest loss or degradation by human activities. Few studies have beenconducted on Neotropical owls, especially in the Piedmont Forest of Northwestern Argentina.The scarcity of information on habitat requirements and the effect of human impacts precludethe establishment of conservation and management activities. The human footprint index (HFI)is a tool for mapping human impacts on biodiversity that is used at global and regional scales,based on the estimated and standardized contribution of different human impact variables(e.g. road networks, urban centers, agricultural land, etc.). The objectives of this work were to: 1)Determine the call rate of five owl species in the Piedmont Forest of Northwestern Argentina, 2)relate forest structure to the call rate of owl species, and 3) relate human footprint index to thecall rate of owls. We placed 28 automatic recorders in the Piedmont Forest, in sites with low andhigh Human influence, and characterized the forest structure around each recorder withina circular plot of 25 m diameter. We obtained 241 vocalizations in 168 intervals of 2 h forFerruginous pygmy owl (Glaucidium brasilianum), Tropical screech-owl (Megascops choliba),Black-banded owl (Ciccaba huhula), Spectacled owl (Pulsatrix perspicillata), and Buff-frontedowl (Aegolius harrisii). We found that for Tropical screech-owl live tree basal area had a positiveand diameter at breast height standard deviation had a negative influence on call rate. Whilefor Black-banded owl, the dead tree density had a positive and human footprint index >1 hada negative influence on call rate. For Spectacled owl, dead tree density and human footprintindex >1 had a negative influence on call rate. We provide first insights into the effects of foreststructure and human influence on the call rate of owls in the Piedmont Forest of NorthwesternArgentina, information that may guide forest management guidelines and conservationstrategies.